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How you define farmer matters.

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    How you define farmer matters.

    http://www.producer.com/2012/05/statistics-
    canada-must-rethink-how-it-defines-farmers-
    for-census-purposes/

    Statistics Canada must rethink how it defines
    farmers for census purposes
    Posted May. 18th, 2012 No Comments

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    0
    Let’s be clear from the get-go.?

    Statistics Canada is a national treasure, its
    data collection illuminates Canadian history
    as it evolves and the Conservative decision
    to diminish its ability to gather information
    is a shortsighted ideological mistake.?

    Much of the agricultural industry depends on
    Statistics Canada to tell the tale of what is
    happening as the world and the sector
    evolves.?

    So none of this is to denigrate the value of
    the work Statistics Canada does.?

    It is, however, to suggest that the federal
    agency should rethink how it collects farm
    data and in particular, how it defines a
    farm.?

    Statistics Canada data on the state of
    farming, the number of farms, farm size, farm
    income and farm sales distorts the reality of
    Canadian agriculture today.?

    It defines a farm as an operation producing
    an agricultural product with the “intention”
    of selling it.?

    There is no need to actually have sold a
    cabbage, to have a minimum farm sales income,
    to even have the intention of trying to make
    money from the farm.?

    So Canada had more than 205,000 farmers last
    year. That hasn’t been true for decades.?

    So Canada lost more than 10 percent of its
    farms between 2006 and 2011. Not a chance.?

    So the average farm size is 778 acres. That
    is so 1960.?

    This is no academic argument. ?

    Federal and provincial agriculture ministers
    use the data as they design national farm
    policy, a process that is now underway and
    that will establish farm policy for the next
    five years, starting next April 1.?

    Urban media use the data to describe what is
    happening on the farm. My God, more than
    23,000 farmers went out of business in five
    years.?

    And while the federal agency presents copious
    amounts of detail about the breakdown of
    segments within agriculture, the broader
    averages are what catch the headlines and
    fuel the political questions about
    agricultural policy failures.?

    So here is a modest proposal.?

    Statistics Canada should create a definition
    of a “farm,” perhaps in collaboration with
    Agriculture Canada.?

    Someone living on an acreage as a want-to-be
    farmer with a fantasy of selling tomatoes in
    the local farmers’ market should not qualify
    as a farmer.?

    While it is politically charged and would
    take years of painful political and
    statistical debate, Statistics Canada should
    try to come up with a way to identify farmers
    who hope to make a living from growing food
    and differentiate them from someone who wants
    the lifestyle and wants to tap into the
    spirit of Grandpa and his pre-mechanized
    farm.?

    Agriculture Canada should insist that its
    sister government agency find a way to
    determine how many serious commercial farmers
    there are so that agricultural and social
    policy do not become interchangeable.?

    Years ago, a federal deputy agriculture
    minister with a cattle herd wrote off losses
    on the farm against his government salary
    because he saw himself as a farmer with
    Ottawa as off-farm income.?

    A federal court ruled that to be a ludicrous
    idea.?

    Likewise, Statistics Canada should not allow
    want-to-be farmers to self-identify and
    thereby skew valuable, informative statistics
    that are the lifeblood of the industry

    #2
    A farmer should be anyone growing a crop with in excess of 4200 acres. Then maybe they will quit pestering me.

    Comment


      #3
      trere are those that dont need thousands of acres to produce a large income 3 acres chicken barn over 1 mill in sales greenhouses, hog barns feedlots ect get over thinking how big and important you are because you can throw around big acerage numbers.

      Comment


        #4
        I'd rather have 20 acres of a high value
        Pharming crop than be a monkey in a
        glass box that doesn't even have to
        steer hour after hour after hour after
        hour after hour after hour after hour
        after hour after hour after hour after
        hour after hour after hour after hour
        after hour after hour after hour after
        hour after hour after hour after hour
        after hour.

        Definition of a farmer is for the income
        tax act. CG claw backs,
        intergenerational CG etc. The guise of
        "how many acres you farm" is just a
        smokescreen for the data the gov really
        wants which is how to tax more
        effectively.

        Comment


          #5
          In 20 years, stats can has NEVER asked my
          opinion of anything.

          Comment


            #6
            I have never answered...and they quit asking.

            If I wanted to do paperwork why did I go
            farming?

            Comment


              #7
              Did some of you even read the article? I know the format is tough but I provided the address. It's left click copy paste.

              I agree that it's not the number of acres that matter, but farm profitability and contribution to the Canadian economy that matter. Hell our farm might be someone else's rounding error but where is that cut off.

              The point I think should be made is that governments should not be using tax dollars to fund someones hobby. Where do we put that line? I think that it might be accrual $50,000.00 net farm in a grain farm. Olympic average maybe. What should it be for cattle, other Ag sectors. Do I have it right on the $50K. WD-9's idea of line 150 is a good one.

              The point of the post was not Stats Cans fascination with my "pineapple" crop and his start saying Stats Can is a National treasure is as another pointed out. "a stretch"

              Comment


                #8
                I really don't mind if the politicians think there are 200,000 farmers in Canada. Maybe they will support us a little better.

                If there are only 20,000 large scale operations defined as farmers we will have no political clout at all.

                Comment

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